Programmed Internal Reconfigurations in a 3D‐Printed Mechanical Metamaterial Enable Fluidic Control for a Vertically Stacked Valve Array

Author:

Supakar Tinku1,Space David1,Mejia Sophy2,Tan Rou Yu3,Alston Jeffrey R.4,Josephs Eric A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nanoscience Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro NC 27401 USA

2. Department of Biology College of Arts and Sciences University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro NC 27412 USA

3. The Early College at Guilford Greensboro NC 27410 USA

4. Department of Nanoengineering Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Greensboro NC 27401 USA

Abstract

AbstractMicrofluidic valves play a key role within microfluidic systems by regulating fluid flow through distinct microchannels, enabling many advanced applications in medical diagnostics, lab‐on‐chips, and laboratory automation. While microfluidic systems are often limited to planar structures, 3D printing enables new capabilities to generate complex designs for fluidic circuits with higher densities and integrated components. However, the control of fluids within 3D structures presents several difficulties, making it challenging to scale effectively and many fluidic devices are still often restricted to quasi‐planar structures. Incorporating mechanical metamaterials that exhibit spatially adjustable mechanical properties into microfluidic systems provides an opportunity to address these challenges. Here, systematic computational and experimental characterization of a modified re‐entrant honeycomb structure are performed to generate a modular metamaterial for an active device that allows us to directly regulate flow through integrated, multiplexed fluidic channels “one‐at‐a‐time,” in a manner that is highly scalable. A design algorithm is presented, so that this architecture can be extended to arbitrary geometries, and it is expected that by incorporation of mechanical metamaterial designs into 3D printed fluidic systems, which themselves are readily expandable to any complex geometries, will enable new biotechnological and biomedical applications of 3D printed devices.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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